<< < -le Lag lam Lan Lar las law lea Lem Leo Ley lig lim lin lin lin lit Loc Loc Lom Lor low lum lun lun Lym > >>
lasting pâyande Fr.: durable Continuing or remaining for a long time; enduring. |
late 1) dir (#); 2) dirân Fr.: tardif; tard; avancé 1) Happening or arriving after an expected or arranged time;
not on time, beyond usual time. M.E., from O.E. læt "slow, late;" cf. Ger. lass "slothful;" O.N. latr, Goth. lats "slow, lazy;" L. lassus "tired, faint;" Gk. ledein "to be weary." Dir "late; tardily, slowly; a long while; old, antique,"
from Mid.Pers. dêr, variants dagr, drâz "long"
(Mod.Pers. derâz "long," variant Laki, Kurdi derež);
O.Pers. darga- "long;"
Av. darəga-, darəγa- "long,"
drājištəm "longest;"
cf. Skt. dirghá- "long (in space and time);"
L. longus "long;" Gk. dolikhos "elongated;"
O.H.G., Ger. lang; Goth. laggs "long;"
PIE base *dlonghos- "long." |
Late Heavy Bombardment (LHB) bombârân-e sangin-e dirân Fr.: Grand Bombardement Tardif A cataclysmic event in the history of the → solar system, estimated to have occurred 3.9 billion years ago (about 600 million years after the formation of the → terrestrial planets) during which → asteroid and → comet impacts with Earth were some 20,000 times more frequent than today. It is estimated that during this period the terrestrial planets were bombarded with an object 1 km in size every 20 years. This hypothetical event lasted 50 to 150 million years. Several explanations have been put forward, among which the occurrence of an instability in the outer solar system which caused → orbital migration of small bodies from the → Kuiper belt inward. → late, with respect to the formation time of the planets; → heavy; bombardment, noun from bombard, from Fr. bombarder, from bombarde "mortar, catapult" from bombe, from It. bomba, probably from L. bombus "a booming sound," from Gk. bombos "deep and hollow sound." |
late helium flash deraxš-e heliom-e dirân Fr.: flash de helium tardif A → helium flash event that occurs during the → post-AGB phase. Some of the central stars of planetary nebulae (→ CSPN) experience a final → thermal pulse after having achieved a → white dwarf configuration and begun their descent along a → white dwarf cooling track of nearly constant radius. During such a pulse, most of the hydrogen remaining in the star at pulse onset is incorporated into the helium-burning convective shell and completely burned. Following the pulse, the star swells briefly to → red giant dimensions (Iben et al. 1983; ApJ 264, 605). |
late thermal pulse tape-ye garmâyi-ye dirân Fr.: flash de l'hélium tardif In evolutionary models of → low-mass and → intermediate-mass stars, the occurrence of a → helium shell flash on the → horizontal branch of the → post-AGB track, while → hydrogen shell burning is still going on. |
late-type galaxy (LTG) kahkešân-e gune-ye farjâmin Fr.: galaxie de type tardif In the → Hubble classification, a galaxy on the left part of the → Hubble sequence. See also → early-type galaxy. |
late-type star setâre-ye gune-ye farjâmin Fr.: étoile de type tardif A star of → spectral type K, M, S, or C, with a surface temperature lower than that of the Sun. → early-type star. See also → spectral classification. |
latent nahân (#) Fr.: latent Present but not visible, apparent, or actualized; existing as potential (Dictionary.com). → latent heat. From L. latentem (nominative latens), pr.p. of latere "to lie hidden." Nahân "concealed, hid; clandestine;" Mid.Pers. nihân "secrecy, a secret place, a hiding place," nihânik "concealed;" Av. niδāti- "deposing, deposit." |
latent heat garmâ-ye nahân (#) Fr.: chaleur latente The amount of → thermal energy that is absorbed or released by a unit amount of a substance in the process of a phase change under conditions of constant pressure and temperature. |
lateral bari, kenâri, pahluyi Fr.: latéral Of or relating to the → side; situated at, proceeding from, or directed to a side (Dictionary.com). M.E., from O.Fr. latéral and directly from L. lateralis "belonging to the side," from latus "the side, flank; lateral surface." Kenâri, relating to kenâr, → side. |
latitude varunâ Fr.: latitude The angle between a perpendicular at a location, and the
→ equatorial plane of the Earth.
→ longitude. See also: L. latitudo "breadth, width, size," from latus "wide," from PIE base *stela- "to spread" (cf. O.C.S. steljo "to spread out," Arm. lain "broad"). Varunâ, from var "breadth, side, breast," variant bar, Tabari vari "width," Mid.Pers. var "breast," Av. varah- "breast" (Sk. vara- "width, breadth") + -u a suffix forming adjectives; Av. vouru- "wide;" + -nâ a suffix of dimension. |
lattice jâré Fr.: réseau 1) A regular geometric arrangement of points in a plane or in space. From O.Fr. latiz "lattice," from late "lath, board, plank, batten" (Fr. latte); cf. O.H.G. latta "lath." Jâré, from jarra "net; snare," Afghan jâli "reticulated garment," Tabari jarazin "grilled apparatus used in a watercourse to gather thatch and trash;" cf. Skt. jāla- "net, snare, lattice." |
lattice energy kâruž-e jâré Fr.: énergie réticulaire The energy required to separate an ion from a → crystal to an infinite distance. In other words, the energy released when one → mole of a crystal is formed from gaseous ions. |
latus rectum târ-e râst Fr.: latus rectum The chord through a focus and perpendicular to then major axis of a conic section. L. latus "side;" rectum "straight," → right. Târ "thread, warp, string" (related to tur "net, fishing net, snare," tâl "thread" (Borujerdi dialect), tân "thread, warp of a web," from tanidan, tan- "to spin, twist, weave;" Mid.Pers. tanitan; Av. tan- "to stretch, extend;" cf. Skt. tan- "to stretch, extend;" tanoti "stretches," tántra- "warp; essence, main point;" Gk. teinein "to stretch, pull tight;" L. tendere "to stretch;" Lith. tiñklas "net, fishing net, snare," Latv. tikls "net;" PIE base *ten- "to stretch." |
launch partâb kardan (#) Fr.: lancer 1) To throw or propel with force; hurl.
→ jet launching. From M.E. launchen "to throw as a lance," O.Fr. lanchier, lancier "to hurl, throw, cast," from L.L. lanceare "wield a lance," from L. lancea "light spear, lance." From partâb "a throw, an arrow that flies far," partâbidan "to throw," → ballistics. |
lava godâzé (#) Fr.: lave Molten → magma released from a volcanic vent or fissure. Lava, from It. lava "torrent, stream," from L. lavare "to wash;" PIE base *lou- "to wash;" cf. Persian Lori, Kurdi, Malâyeri laf "flood," variants Tabari lé, [Mo'in, Dehxodâ] lur, lây "flood;" Gk. louein "to wash." |
law qânun (#), arté (#) Fr.: loi 1) A rule of conduct or procedure established by custom, agreement,
or authority. M.E., O.E. lagu, from O.N. *lagu, variant of lag "that which is laid down;" cf. Ger. liegen, E. lay, lie; PIE *legh- "To lie, lay;" compare with Hittite laggari "falls, lies," Gk. lekhesthai "to lie down," L. lectus "bed," O.Ir. lige "bed, tomb," Tokharian lake, leke "bed." Qânun, from Ar., ultimately from Gk. kanon "rule." |
law of cosines qânun-e kosinushâ Fr.: loi des cosinus An expression that for any triangle relates the length of a side to the cosine of the opposite angle and the lengths of the two other sides. If a, b, and c are the sides and A, B, and C are the corresponding opposites angles: a2 = b2 + c2 - 2bc cos A; b2 = c2 + a2 - 2ca cos B; c2 = a2 + b2 - 2ab cos C. |
law of excluded middle qânun-e miyâni soklândé Fr.: principe du milieu exclu Same as → principle of excluded middle. |
law of identity qânun-e idâni Fr.: principe d'identité Same as → principle of identity. |
<< < -le Lag lam Lan Lar las law lea Lem Leo Ley lig lim lin lin lin lit Loc Loc Lom Lor low lum lun lun Lym > >>